You have selected Help for
using and searching the Psychological Study of the Arts
collection. To return to your previous location, use
the Back button on your browser. To return to the Psychological
Study of the Arts collection home page, click on the
Psychological Study of the Arts collection icon (Freud's
face).
Clicking on any of these topics will link you to the
appropriate section in this document.
Search Help
Helpful Tips for Beginners
Basic and Advanced Search Screens
Basic Search and Advanced
Search screens have pull-down
menus. Click and hold the mouse on the arrow on the right
to see the choices in any pull-down menu. Select a choice
by dragging your mouse to it and highlighting it.
If you are using Basic Search, press Enter or click the
Submit button to send your search to the system. If you
are using Advanced Search, you must click the Submit
button to send your search to the system.
Bibliographic Records and Fields
Searches are done on "bibliographic records" that
describe Psychological Study of the Arts materials. Bibliographic
records generally look something like this:
Author, etc.:
Williams, Eric Eustace
Title:
Massa day done / [electronic resource] by Miss Lovechild.
Edition:
Marks' ed.
Published:
Port-of-Spain, Trinidad : P.N.M. Pub. Co., [1961?].
Description:
19 p. ; 21 cm.
Notes:
Cover title
Electronic version available on the World Wide Web.
Subjects, general:
Trinidad and Tobago--Politics and government.
Other author(s), etc.:
PALMM (Project)
LINKS:
Electronic resource (JPEG)
Electronic resource (PDF)
As you can see, bibliographic records are composed of
labeled sections called "fields". The sample
record above has one field labeled "Author" containing
the information "Williams, Eric Eustace", and
one field labeled "Title" containing the information "Massa
day done". There is 1 field labeled "Subjects,
general". When you do a search on a bibliographic
record, you can chose to search all the data in the record,
or only data in certain fields.
Keyword and Headings Indexes
Most search options are for either Keyword or Headings type indexes. In a Keyword type index, words can be searched
regardless of where they appear in the field of the bibliographic
record. For example, the search type called Keyword(s) is a Keyword type of index. Searching the word "John" in
the Keyword(s) index will find both of these authors:
John, Nancy
Lovechild, Miss
Pease, Richard H.
Words searched in Keyword type indexes have to match
exactly. If you want to search on part of a word, you
have to use the symbol "?" to indicate where
to truncate your search term. For example, searching
the word "John" in the Keyword(s) index will
not match on "Johnson", but, searching "John?" will.
In a Headings type index, your search term is matched
against the start of each field, from left to right.
Right truncation is assumed. For example, searching the
word "John" in an author headings index will
find both of these authors:
John, Nancy
Johnson, Lyndon Baines
but it will not find the author
Dickison, J.J. (John J.)
Browsing by Author or Title
It is possible to browse the collection by clicking
the Author List or Title List buttons on the Psychological
Study of the Arts collection home page. Choose one of
these options to retrieve an alphabetical list of documents
available in Psychological Study of the Arts collection.
Author List: This list is arranged by the last name
of the author. Selecting a letter from the A to Z bar
jumps to documents written by authors whose last name
starts with the selected letter.
Title List: This list is arranged alphabetically by
title. Selecting a letter from the A to Z bar jumps to
titles starting with the selected letter.
Basic Searching 
The Basic Search screen lets you search for keywords,
authors, titles, and subjects; genre/form headings can
be searched as though they are subjects. For additional
options, click on Advanced Search in the toolbar.
Search types available on the Basic Search Screen
1. Keyword(s):
Use this search to find a word or words anywhere in the bibliographic record
(that is, words in author names, titles, subjects or notes). If you enter
more than one word, the system assumes that both words are required (AND)
in the same bibliographic record. This is a Keyword type of index. If you
want to search on part of word, use a question mark (?) to indicate where
you have truncated the word (e.g., typing hurricane? finds hurricane and
hurricanes).
2. Author's Name:
Use this search to find authors, editors and other contributors. Authors may
be people or organizations. You can type all or part of a name, but you must
type the author's last name first.
Examples:
scott
scott thomas
jacksonville board
3. Title:
Use this search to find a title. Don't enter initial articles (i.e., type "sound
and the fury" not "the sound and the fury"). You can type all
or part of the title.
Examples:
dogs grand dinner party
ladder of learning
sugar and spice
4. Subject:
Use this search to find subject headings, including Library of Congress subject
headings, genre/form headings, and geographic locations. If you don't know
the heading exactly, try using a Keyword(s) search. You can enter all or
part of the subject heading. If the subject heading displays with a double
dash, include the dashes in your search.
Examples:
alphabet
alphabet books--1852
New York
primers
When searching geographic locations, separate name elements
with spaces; do not use commas. Name elements may be
listed in any order. Searches for "New
York Albany", "Albany New York", "New Albany York" and "York
Albany New", for example, produce the same result.
Format Options on the Basic Search Screen
Most materials in the Florida Aerial Photography collection
have been digitized and are available for viewing online
in both PDF and JPEG formats. Some materials have been
selected for digitization but are not yet available.
The Format box allows you to retrieve information about
all materials that match your search (All Items) or to
restrict your results to only those materials that are
available for viewing online (Items Available Online).
Advanced Searching 
The Advanced Search screen contains an extended search
form, which enables you to enter search terms in various
field groupings. You may also limit the format and/or
grade level of the materials you retrieve.
When should the Advanced Search Screen be used?
- if you retrieve too many results with a Basic search
- if you need to do complex Boolean searches
- if you want to limit results to a particular grade
level
Search types available on the Advanced Search Screen
The Advanced Search screen allows you to enter all the
searches available on the Basic
Search form (Keyword(s),
Author's Name, Title, Subject, Timeline). It also allows
these additional searches:
1. Subject Keywords: This search looks for words in
subject, genre/form headings, and geographic location
fields only. This is a Keyword type of search.
2. Title Keywords: This search looks for words in title
fields only. This is a Keyword type of search.
3. Author Keywords: This search looks for words in
author fields only. This is a Keyword type of search.
4. Browse Keywords: This search option lets you browse
through a list of terms from the keyword index alphabetically
preceding and following the term you enter. Clicking
on a term will take you to a list of records containing
that term, and is the same as entering that term as a
Keyword(s) search.
5. Journal/Magazine Title: Your input text is searched
for as a title except that the results are limited to
journals, magazines, annuals and other items that are
published at periodic intervals. This search type helps
eliminate from your search results items with similar
titles that are not journals. For example, if you want
to look for the magazine Time, the journal title search
will return only Time, and leave out the many hits on
the Time-Life books series. This is a Headings type of
search.
6. Subject Headings LC: This search looks for Library
of Congress Subject Headings only. This is a Headings
type of search.
7. Browse A/T/S: This search type allows you to search
the merged author/title/subject (a/t/s) headings index
in a dictionary format with cross-references. In the
a/t/s index, you can display the closest place to the
text you enter in your search statement. You will be
able to browse forward and backward through the a/t/s
headings and you may navigate to records. This is a Headings
type of search.
8. Keyword Notes/Abstracts: This search looks for words
in notes and abstracts only. This is a Keyword type of
search.
9. ISBN: Standard number searching enables you to locate
a work if you know the number. This search type causes
the system to look for your search text in the International
Standard Book Number (ISBN) index for headings that match
your input. This is a Headings type of search.
10. ISSN: Standard number searching enables you to
locate a work if you know the number. This search type
causes the system to look for your search text in the
International Standard Serial Number (ISSN) index for
headings that match your input. This is a Headings type
of search.
11. OCLC Control Number: Standard number searching
enables you to locate a work if you know the number.
This search type causes the system to look for your search
text in the Online Computer Library Center Control Number
index for headings that match your input. This is a Headings
type of search.
12. LC Control Number: Standard number searching enables
you to locate a work if you know the number. This search
type causes the system to look for your search text in
the Library of Congress Control Number (LCCN) index for
headings that match your input. This is a Headings type
of search.
Limits available on the Advanced Search Screen
Format
Most materials in the Psychological Study of the Arts
collection have been digitized and are available for
viewing online in both PDF and JPEG formats. Some materials
have been selected for digitization but are not yet available.
The Format box allows you to retrieve information about
all materials that match your search (All Items) or to
restrict your results to only those materials that are
available for viewing online (Items Available Online).
Taking Advantage of Boolean and Proximity Operators:
Boolean Operators
A Boolean operator allows you to specify the logical
relationship between search terms that occur in the same
record. The Advanced Search screen allows you to use
the following Boolean operators:
- and:
The and operator is used to make a connection between two terms that will retrieve
records. And retrieves all records containing at least one occurrence of
the specified terms. All of the specified terms must be in the record. And is useful for decreasing the amount of records retrieved by a search statement.
Please note WebLUIS supplies and as the default operator if more than one
term appears in the input box and you do not explicitly select the operator(s)
in your search.
- or:
The or operator retrieves records that contain one term or the other, or both,
regardless of their position in a record. Or is used to combine two or more
terms that are synonyms or variant terms. Or is useful for increasing the
amount of records retrieved.
- not:
Not is used to exclude from your retrieval sets those records that contain
a certain term or terms. In other words, the not operator retrieves any record
which contains the first term but not the second. You should use not only
when absolutely certain that you do not want any records that happen to contain
the not term. If your not term is not very specific, you may accidentally
exclude some relevant records.
Proximity Operators
- adj:
The adj operator searches for terms that occur adjacent to each other in the
same sentence or phrase (in the order typed); in other words, the second
term immediately follows the first term. Stopwords may exist between the
two search terms, they are ignored.
- near:
The near operator also searches for terms that are adjacent to each other.
Near is the same as adj, except that the two search terms can occur in either
order.
- within n (where n is a number):
The within n operator (where n is a number) is the same as near except that
n specifies the maximum number of words that can occur between the two search
terms. For example, florida within 1 university, would retrieve those records
containing such phrases as the University of Florida, Florida Atlantic University,
Florida International University, and Florida State University.
- same:
Using same to combine terms will retrieve those records that have the search
terms appearing in the same field of a record (not necessarily together)
and in either order. For example, common same law, would retrieve records
with information about common law and law passed by Britain's House of Commons
as well as this work: The Alien and the Immigration Law written by the Common
Council for American Unity.
Search Tips Using Boolean and Proximity Operators
In any kind of keyword(s) search type you may use proximity
and/or boolean operators in a single input box. For example,
if you choose Author Keywords as your search type, you
may type two or more names in one input box using a boolean
and/or proximity operator -- e.g. shakespeare or aristotle.
Remember, the system default is and so use parentheses
to specify the order in which you would like the system
to execute the various components of your search statement
-- e.g. (shakespeare or aristotle) and poetry. You may
use multiple levels of parentheses (or nesting) if needed.
Be sure that each set of parentheses is complete.
Understanding Search Results 
Entering your search terms on either Basic
Search or
Advanced Search screens causes the system to return with
a search results page. Your Search Terms are displayed
under the toolbar and before the results list. The total
number of "hits" (records that matched your
search) is indicated as well as the record count.
The results list usually contains short entries (generally
title, author and date of publication) for records matching
your search. The title is a hyperlink you can click on
to see the full bibliographic record. There are also
hyperlinks to the full text of the document, if it is
available online, in both JPEG and PDF formats. If you
display the full bibliographic record for a document,
access points such as authors, series and subjects are
hyperlinks. Clicking on those hyperlinks performs a new
search for records matching that heading.
E-Mail and Print Options
It is possible to e-mail bibliographic records to any
e-mail address. To select a record for emailing, click
on (check) the Mark box to the left of the short results
entry, or at the top left of the full bibliographic record.
You can mark any number of records for emailing. When
you are ready to mail, click on E-mail
Marked under Command
Options bar to the right of the screen. The system will
prompt you to choose a record format and to enter your
email address. The records are mailed when you click
on Send. To clear out the checks in the Mark boxes, use
your browser's Reload function.
It is also possible to format one or more bibliographic
records for printing by first marking the record(s) you
want by checking the Mark box(es) and then selecting
Print Marked from Command Options. This reformats the
records on your screen. You can then use your browser's
Print function to actually print them.
Formats available for emailing and printing are Brief,
Long and Tagged. The Brief format is good for producing
a short citation or list of citations with locations
and call numbers, for example, for taking to the bookstacks.
The Long format gives complete bibliographic information
including all subjects, series and notes, as well as
locations and call numbers. The Tagged format is useful
for importing into citation managers such as ProCite
and Notebook II.
General Help
Minimum Browser Requirements 
The Palmm Collection works with all standard compliant
browsers. Current versions of Firefox and Microsoft
Internet Explorer (or similar browser with Java and Javascript
enabled) are recommended. Current versions of Firefox
and Internet Explorer are available free for downloading.
Full text documents in Psychological Study of the Arts
collection are available in Portable Document Format
(PDF) for downloading and printing. Your browser must
be configured to run the Acrobat Reader software in order
to read a PDF document. Acrobat Reader is available free
and can be downloaded from Adobe's
Download Page. For
a detailed instruction and a step-by-step tutorial you
may refer to the Acrobat
Reader Tutorial.
Electronic Formats: JPEG and PDF 
Documents in the Psychological Study of the Arts collection
are available in JPEG and PDF formats.
JPEG:
JPEG images are good for displaying online in your browser.
Every page of books and other documents in the Psychological
Study of the Arts collection is represented by one
JPEG image. To move from page to page, use the Next
and Previous buttons on the menu bar at the top or
bottom of the screen.
PDF:
PDF files are good for downloading and printing. In general,
all of the pages in a chapter or other type of section
are "bundled together" into a single PDF
file. When you click on a link to a PDF file the Adobe
Acrobat Reader launches automatically and displays
the document on your screen. The Acrobat Reader has
navigation tools that allow you to turn pages, zoom
in and out, and print or download the file. You must
have the Acrobat Reader properly configured in your
browser. Please see Minimum Browser Requirements for
more information.
Using Full Text Documents 
Navigation (moving around)
Choosing either the JPEG or the PDF version of a document
will take you to the Table of Contents for the document.
Selecting (clicking on) any entry from the Table of Contents
will take you directly to that section.
In the JPEG version, clicking on Next and Previous on
the menu bar at the top or bottom of the page will take
you to the next or previous page of the document, even
if that page is in another section. That is, you can "next" directly
from the last page of Chapter 1 to the first page of
Chapter 2 if you want.
In the PDF version, every section is a separate PDF file.
You can move from page to page within the section by
using the vertical scroll bar at the right of the screen,
or the page turner in the command bar at the bottom of
the PDF window. (The page turner shows "n of n" --
e.g. "1 of 3" -- between left and right arrows.)
To move to another section, use your browser's Back button
to return to the Table of Contents, and then select the
section you want.
Menu Bar Options
The menu bar displays at the top and bottom of the Table
of Contents page and every JPEG image page. Only relevant
options display at any time -- e.g., you will never see
a "Next" button if you are on the last page
of a document. The possible buttons and their meanings
are listed below.
- Citation: This will take you back to the bibliographic
description of the document in WebLUIS.
- Contents: This will take you to the Table of Contents.
- Go To Page: This will take you
directly to a page selected from the pull-down menu
to the right of this button. Select the page you want
from the pull-down and click the "Go To" button.
- Next: This will take you to the next page in a document,
or the next image in an ordered set of images (e.g. the
next postcard in a collection of postcards).
- PDF Files | JPEG Images: This functions as a toggle,
switching you to the PDF version if you are currently
viewing JPEG, and vice versa. In all cases, it will return
you to the Table of Contents for the new format.
- Prev: This takes you to the previous page of a document,
or the previous image in an ordered group of images (e.g.
an earlier postcard in a postcard collection).
- Search results: This will take you back to the results
of your last previous search in WebLUIS.
|